| Literature DB >> 34079082 |
Xin Yang1,2,3, Yan Chen4, You Zhou5,6,7, Chen Wu4, Qing Li8, Jun Wu4, Wen Wei Hu4, Wei Qing Zhao4, Wei Wei4, Chang Ping Wu4, Jing Ting Jiang9,10,11, Mei Ji12.
Abstract
Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related death worldwide. Glypican-5 (GPC5) is a member of heparan sulfate proteoglycans, and its biological importance in initiation and progression of lung cancer remains controversial. In the present study, we revealed that GPC5 transcriptionally enhanced the expression of CTDSP1 (miR-26b host gene) via AhR-ARNT pathway, and such up-regulation of CTDSP1 intracellularly contributed to the inhibited proliferation of lung cancer cells. Moreover, exosomes derived from GPC5-overexpressing human lung cancer cells (GPC5-OE-derived exosomes) had an extracellular repressive effect on human lymphatic endothelial cells (hLECs), leading to decreased tube formation and migration. Comparison between GPC5-WT- and GPC5-OE-derived exosomes showed that miR-26b (embedded within introns of CTDSP1 gene) was significantly up-regulated in GPC5-OE-derived exosomes and critical to the influence on hLECs. On the mechanism, we demonstrated that miR-26b transferred into hLECs directly targeted to PTK2 3'-UTR and led to PTK2 down-regulation, resulting in defects in tube formation and migration of hLECs. By uncovering the regulation network among GPC5, miR-26b, miR-26b host gene (CTDSP1), and target gene (PTK2), our findings demonstrated that GPC5 functioned as a tumor suppressor in human lung cancer.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34079082 DOI: 10.1038/s41388-021-01837-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncogene ISSN: 0950-9232 Impact factor: 9.867